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Book Club - by Luke

Book Club - September 2006

De Niro

September 29th 2006 08:58


This is the most recent biography to have been released about Robert De Niro, that reclusive actor who delves into rabid depths of method madness. Biographer John Baxter has done a pretty decent job here too... he manages to assemble a mass of material that would have entailed a LOT of research and he manages to say something new too, which is something all good biographies strive to do in order to be fresh and relevant I guess.


Is this one fresh and relevant? Pretty much.

Is it good? I'm not as sure about that one...

To present a clear picture of De Niro's early days is an achievement in itself, and this book's most interesting sequences are those that deal with De Niro's background, the formation of his character and his emerging dedication to his craft. For someone as shy and unknown as Robert De Niro, I'm amazed that this much can be told... I can't help but question how true it all is, but if Baxter hasn't been sued and the book still remains in print than I guess we have to take his word!

The big revelation of this book is that De Niro's father, New York artist Robert De Niro Snr, was in fact a homosexual. It sheds an interesting light on an actor accustomed to playing tough guy characters and giving reserved yet intense performances. And whilst De Niro has pushed his range in the manner that all the great method actors have done (eg. Marlon Brando, Dustin Hoffman, Paul Newman), he has never actually played anything remotely close to the kind of character that Baxter presents his father as. I found this very interesting, despite it's 'gossipy' nature.


Where the book fell flat for me though is in Baxter's re-telling of De Niro's career... Baxter is kind enough to show De Niro's struggle to fame in a fairly even light, detailing his breakthroughs and dedication to method-acting almost favourably at times. However, post-Raging Bull, Baxter has very scant praise for the actor - presenting De Niro's every effort as an actor, celebrity and person as ridiculous.

De Niro's employment of 'the method', for Baxter a source of mystery and unique skill when it wins the actor awards and widespread critical kudos, becomes a pinata of absurdity for the author in regards to the last 25 years of De Niro's career. The author is quick to add his praise when his peers have offered it in their marking of the actor as a screen legend in regards to his roles in films like 'Taxi Driver', 'Mean Streets', 'The Godfather II', 'The Deer Hunter' and 'Raging Bull', but aside from these instances he seems to have nothing but contempt for the man he has based his book on. Now, call me strange, but when I buy a book about Robert De Niro it's to be somewhat expected that I might be a fan of the man's acting... fair enough, his talent has slipped in the last ten years, but I think this John Baxter fellow might be forgetting his audience when he presents a reclusive actor like De Niro as a silly fool. It just seems a bit more subjective than neccessary and smacks of author-annoyance in regards to the lack of interviews De Niro grants.

Anyway, I think I've harped on about my problems with this book enough. I don't think you'll find a more up to date or detailed account of De Niro's career in print at the moment, but don't expect the author to endear himself or his subject to you.

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What's Terry Pratchett up to?

September 28th 2006 08:35


'Wintersmith' is the latest offering from prolific fantasy/humour author Terry Pratchett. It should be out around about now actually... I haven't seen it in any bookstores but it's due for release any day now. It's the third of Pratchett's stories involving the character Tiffany Aching, a young witch.

Pratchett has also confirmed his next two releases... he is currently working on 'Making Money', set to be a sequel to his recent Discworld novel 'Going Postal', and a fourth Tiffany Aching book, 'I Shall Wear Midnight', is also planned.



He also apparently has several more novels already in the pipeline, so it doesn't look like he is about to slow up anytime soon. Nor do his book sales for that matter.
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The Horse and His Boy

September 27th 2006 08:02


'The Horse and His Boy' is the third book in the Chronicles of Narnia series, intended by it's author to be read after 'The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe'. Confusingly, it was released fifth of the seven Narnia books, and was written fourth... how delightfully higgledy-piggledy! In spite of all this, it's actually a decent story on it's own and I don't think it's probably all that neccessary to read any other books in the series if you wanted to just read this one.

The Horse and 'his boy' of the book's title refers to a Talking Narnian Horse, Bree, and a young-slave boy, Shasta. Both live lives of extreme hardship in the vast kingdom of Calormen, and through a fortuitous meeting they decide to run away together - to break their yokes of oppression and head north to the free land of Narnia.

Along the way they meet with Aravis, another native runaway who has also teamed up with a Talking Narnian Horse. The quartet have several adventures together and even get tangled up amongst Calormen-Narnian intrigues - Royalty from Narnia and it's neighbouring kingdom, Archenland, are in the Calormen capitol on diplomatic business... business that looks about to turn very sour indeed and could lead to war between the two nations.

This is a very neat and well-written tale and C. S. Lewis makes his customary allusions to Old and New Testement, but it this religous aspect isn't anywhere near as direct as in the previous two books of the series. There's a lot going on and the adventure at large involves some interesting surprises, and Lewis never forgets to keep things interesting - invoking equal doses of humour and emotional engagement to offset the action and intrigue. It's very much a book suitable to be read to children, or by children, but remains involving enough to retain entertainment value for imaginative adults.

My only real criticism of this book, and I think it shows it's age here, is it's depiction of the massive empire of Calormen. The Calormenes are a race of people very much in the Arabic/Islamic mould... and nearly all Calormenes shown in the book seem inherently evil - incapable of redemption, sympathy or even humour, whereas the Narnians and Archenlanders are almost without fault and always redeemable. The Calormene culture is presented in the way 1950s Christians saw the barbaric Muslim world... obviously this is where Lewis was coming from, but, well - I hoped he would've had more foresight than this and as a result this book sometimes feels very dated and somewhat racist.

It's very one-sided at times... even Calormene poetry is said to be boring and without redeeming features, and when their architecture and cities are praised as being beautiful Lewis is quick to point out that these things are actually quite horrible close up and at no point does he offer anything good to say about the entire culture of these people. I know it can't really be taken at face value - Calormen isn't Arabia, but it might as well be, and for all Lewis' transposing of Christian mythology into his Narnia chronicles, there's very little doubt as to what this empire of cruel, dark-faced people represents.

Anyway, I don't want to sour this book any more than that - if you can take that sort of thing with a grain of salt then 'The Horse and His Boy' remains a cracking good adventure story and an interesting expansion of the world of Narnia and it's neighbouring lands.
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Grass For His Pillow

September 26th 2006 05:50
'Grass For His Pillow' is the second novel in Lian Hearn's popular and acclaimed fantasy/adventure series 'Tales of the Otori'. Focusing on the feudal intrigues of rival Clans of Samurai warlords in a Japan-like land known only as 'The Three Countries', the series mainly follows two central characters; the conflicted and almost super-human assassin-Lord, Takeo, and the abused, cursed and strong-willed Lady Kaede - lovers seperated by rigid codes of class and Takeo's own ambiguous loyalties.

This book picks up almost immediately from the end of 'Across the Nightingale Floor'. Takeo has joined with the mysterious and ammoral group known only as The Tribe, and this book does a lot to answer all the questions we might have asked ourselves about them in the first book. Kaede, on the other hand, returns to her homelands to find them in ruin and her half of the book is about her own self-actualisation, her growing thirst for power and her general transformation from naive young girl to responsible adult as she takes up the reigns of her native Clan.

A lot more is filled in about the Three Countries themselves and we learn more about the caste system that is mostly only implied in the previous book - we learn exactly how the Tribe fit in around the warring Clans, about the outcastes (a kind of peasant class akin to the Untouchable class in Hindu culture), and more about the Clans and the changing nature of their relationships with one another and the ongoing evolution of the Three Countries. Nothing is shunned or left out... much realism is added through the inclusion of homosexuality, as well as Hearn's acknowledgement of certain human weaknesses that would normally be overlooked by books about honour codes and the like.

Unfortunately this book isn't too concerned with a story unto itself, it's more about setting up a bigger story for events to come in the third book, 'The Brilliance of the Moon'... the introduction of a prophecy and the colouring of the various religions practiced throughout the Three Countries, as well as the added information about the outcastes and Kaede's changing status and her questioning of feudal sexual politics - these things all point towards the next book and the bigger picture. Takeo's half of the book is interesting in it's expansion of the story but (despite containing the more action-orientated sequences) it didn't engage me the way that Kaede's story did... her rebellion against the traditional role of a female in this kind of story was far more interesting and motivating ground and it made for quicker reading whenever her parts came up (the opposite was the case for me in the first book, where Takeo's story was the more interesting of the two!)

So I can't really reccomend this book on it's own to anyone, it isn't stand-alone but if you liked the first book, 'Across the Nightingale Floor', then you'll eat this one up too. This series looks to be the sort that you have to read in it's entireity though. What can I say? Sometimes the best series are of that nature!
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Well, it looks like Lemony's Snicket's popular and miserable 'Series of Unfortunate Events' is about to come to an end. The 13th book in the series, ominously titled simply as 'The End' will be released on the 13th of October, which also happens to be Friday the 13th


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Which Lie Did I Tell?

September 22nd 2006 03:44

'Which Lie Did I Tell' is a non-fiction book by celebrated screenwriter William Goldman. It follows on from his previous book about writing in Hollywood, 'Adventures in the Screen Trade'.

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The Golem's Eye

September 21st 2006 03:17

The Golem's Eye is the second book in the much-acclaimed Bartimaeus trilogy, a trio of teen-aimed fantasy novels that exist as a kind of antidote to the wide-eyed idealism of the Harry Potter series. In Jonathan Stroud's Bartimaeus trilogy we see a class of magicians who rule over Britain as imperialistic tyrants... treating the non-magician underclass as little better than slaves. In Stroud's vision of an alternate magic-wielding human race we see that all power corrupts, without exception.

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Kurt Vonnegut

September 20th 2006 11:59


Birth Name: Kurt Vonnegut Jr


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The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe

September 19th 2006 04:55


'The Lion, The WItch and the Wardrobe' is a deadset motherfucking children's classic. The film? Haven't seen it. Do I want to? Maybe. Who can tell these things. Is the book good? Hell yes


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Peter Jackson's next Fantasy films?

September 18th 2006 04:36


For a while I've been looking at these new fantasy books by Naomi Novik... the second book of her Temeraire series has been released in Australia just recently, and I couldn't help but look at these books with a certain, I dunno, scorn or distaste. The first of her books released here in Australia features a dragon and 18th century-style naval ship on the cover (see pic above)... this, coupled with references to Robin Hobb in the book's' promotional quotage, just made me think these books were a thinly veiled ripoff of Hobb's 'Liveship' trilogy. Silly, I know - one shouldn't judge a book by it's cover (but what else do we have to judge it by


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Eragon trailer

September 15th 2006 06:54
'Children's' fantasy book 'Eragon' is about to undergo a boom of interest I think. It's been a very popular book since it's publication a couple of years ago, and was followed up by 'Eldest' not so long ago. The author of these books (which are to be a trilogy, the third book is yet to be completed) is Christopher Paolini, a young author and all-round smartarse who started writing his fantasy series when he was just 15 ('Eragon' was released when he was 18). Why do I think there is about to be a resurgence of interest? Because there's a movie being made silly!

Eragon 'teaser' - click to watch

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I'm a big fan of places like The Hutt River Province and Sealand... self-proclaimed countries who thumb their noses at the authorities, dodge taxes and generally lark about being eccentric and amusingly pompous. I had absorbed as much info as I thought it was possible to absorb via the internet, and I've even sent letters off to the Hutt River Province, as well as various other places on their behalf in an effort to help get them some of the recognition they're so widely denied. Then along came this book, the Lonely Planet Guide to Micronations. A whole book on self-made countries! A whole book! I was in heaven.

Whilst this book is firmly tongue-in-cheek, in accordance with the cheeky manner and ridiculous claims of some of these places, it's all 100% true (as stated on the cover). The book is divided up into three easily identifiable sections... the serious Micronations (home-made nations who have taken their claims the furthest... the ones who also get away with the most), backyard Micronations (exactly as it sounds, people who have declared their own houses to be authorities only unto themselves) and 'Grand Dreams' (micronations that sound way too crazy to ever be successful


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The Iron Man

September 13th 2006 06:16


This is a wonderful, albeit short, children's book from celebrated poet Ted Hughes. I have seldom seen such efficient and effective writing in children's fiction, nor anywhere else for that matter, and the way he describes his story is every bit as fascinating as the unique story itself


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Across the Nightingale Floor

September 12th 2006 07:04


'Across the Nightingale Floor' is the first book in a trilogy known as 'Tales of the Otori', an historical/fantasy series set in a land based on feudal Japan. They are written by an Australian author, "Lian Hearn" (more about the author at the bottom of this review), and have become tremendously popular since their release not so long ago. So much so that two follow up books are already planned


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Patrick O'Brian

September 11th 2006 06:25


Birth Name: Richard Patrick Russ


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New Releases

September 9th 2006 05:08
I got some pamphletage on New Release books from PanMacmillan yesterday. Some decent look books on there way... some bestsellers coming up for sure. Here's are three of the more interesting books you'll be seeing in stores soon.


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John Wayne - The Man Behind the Myth

September 8th 2006 04:18

I love John Wayne. I don't think he was a sissy, it's not an ironic love like Rik's fannery of Cliff Richard in 'The Young Ones'. This is a genuine appreciation of a screen giant and his unique talent and just how generally damn iconic he was. When I think Superstars (yes, with a capital S) I think... Steve McQueen, John Wayne and Tom Cruise. These people are known everywhere in the world and will be remembered for some time after they went. We might not get a mythical icon like Wayne again... Cruise has damaged his name too much with his offscreen weirdness, and the media is too quick to latch onto anything that damages the image of a star these days. Wayne is an icon from a dying era.

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The Royal Assassin

September 7th 2006 03:46


The Royal Assassin is the second book in Robin Hobb's highly acclaimed and much-loved Farseer trilogy. When I starting reading this after the very enjoyable first book I had no idea what I was getting myself into. The Royal Assassin plunged me into a harrowing and intense series of events that don't let up... not even at the end


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Danny, the Champion of the World

September 5th 2006 08:25
Danny


Danny, the Champion of the World probably remains my favourite Roald Dahl book. I don't claim to have read them all or to be some kind of massive Dahl fan but this one particular book is the one that has resonated the most with me, and stayed in my thoughts past childhood like no other Dahl book


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Wild Swans

September 4th 2006 07:28
wild swans


'Wild Swans' is an biographical/autobiographical account of modern Chinese history. Author Jung Chang shows us the many changes, trials and tribulations that China faced in the 20th century, telling us the story in a very personal way through the eyes of her grandmother, her mother and then herself


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The Sirens of Titan

September 1st 2006 12:32

'The Sirens of Titan' is Kurt Vonnegut's second book. It is also the one book of his that is most definable as 'science-fiction' (rather than science fiction-like literature). It's a very enjoyable book and I'd reccomend it to both sci-fi fans and people looking to get into Vonnegut's stuff. After his first book, the proto-satire 'Player Piano', this is probably the true start of his unique and famous writing style - with many of his recurring themes, styles and ideas appearing for the first time here.

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